• On TV.com: Are HEROES' Actors Jumping Ship?
October 30, 2009 12:26 PM PDT

GE launches eHealth, hopes for early adopters

by Elizabeth Armstrong Moore
  • Font size
  • Print
  • 2 comments
Share

The government's $19 billion incentive package to compel doctors and hospitals to digitize their inefficient paper record systems is nice and shiny. But until a platform exists to support the easy yet secure flow of highly sensitive personal information, that promise could also be empty.

Seeing a business opportunity, General Electric unveiled on Thursday its new unit, eHealth, a suite of solutions that aims to provide the necessary infrastructure. (GE reports that it is investing $90 million to launch eHealth.) It is a daunting task, but if it works, a digital record system that streamlines connectivity between clinicians and patients would eventually cost less, work faster, and reduce medical errors, some of which can be fatal.

The eHealth suite includes LifeSensor for patients.

(Credit: Screenshot by Elizabeth Armstrong Moore/CNET)

GE is not the first to try to set up health information-sharing networks, which are currently called Health Information Exchanges. (They used to be called Community Health Information Networks and later Regional Health Information Organizations.) Without any incentive to make the transition, most hospitals and clinics didn't.

An initial $564 million seed grant, dispersed from the federal government to states, has been established to convince them to make the move. But to qualify for payment, hospitals and clinics will need to be able to use electronic health records that can travel securely across networks.

"eHealth provides the next level of connectivity," says Jim Younkin, IT program director for Geisinger Health System, which has utilized GE technologies through the Keystone Health Information Exchange, a sort of pilot project that already serves 31 counties in Pennsylvania. "More than 345,000 patients have registered for our exchange, and those patients have given their health care providers at eight hospitals and other regional health facilities timely access to relevant information through a secure connection. This, in turn, helps ensure these patients receive optimal care."

At this point, eHealth is focusing on patient health records, an information exchange infrastructure to share those records, documentation formatted specifically for clinicians, and the matching of patient documentation from a range of sources and organizations. Gone will be the days of such annoyances as squinting at bad handwriting, paying to have health records mailed from one office to another, and keeping track of just how many X-rays you've had in the past year.

Eventually, Health Information Exchanges could include automated notifications to primary physicians as patients are admitted to or released from hospitals, as well as the ongoing aggregation of a patient's lab results to better inform that patient's caregivers, Younkin says.

There will be, of course, at least one casualty of the widespread adoption of electronic health records: the demise of paper supply companies near you. At least everybody's favorite lives on--in its delightfully ironic digital format.

Elizabeth Armstrong Moore is a freelance journalist based in Portland, Ore. She has contributed to Wired magazine, The Christian Science Monitor, and public radio. Her semi-obscure hobbies include unicycling, slacklining, hula-hooping, scuba diving, billiards, Sudoku, Magic the Gathering, and classical piano. She is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.
advertisement
 
Remove up to 2x more plaque* with an Oral-B electric toothbrush.
*Oral-B ProfessionalCare series vs. a regular manual toothbrush
Recent posts from Health Tech
How to baby-proof a disaster zone
Giving voice to a new artificial larynx
Teen scientists vie for $100,000 prize in N.Y.
Disease-detecting device vibrates with potential
New research suggests porn is overly demonized
Science untarnished by 'Climategate,' U.N. says
Note to hospitals: The pen is mightier than the data entry worker
IBM staffer posts pics on Facebook, loses benefits
Add a Comment (Log in or register)
by Jamie_Foster October 30, 2009 4:10 PM PDT
GE was the company that pioneered BPO to India (New Delhi) in the early 1990s in GE Capital. They are one of the most greedy and ruthless companies in the world. The only thing they have cared about since the days of Jack Welch is getting stuff done at the lowest possible cost. They pioneered moving manufacturing to first Mexico and Hungary then finally to China. They are a financial engineering company but a real engineering company. They only spent $2.5bn on R&D annually whilst Siemens spends $6bn/year. Siemens also make better quality products. The problem is that other US firms have seen GE as a role model and have followed their M.O like sheep. IBM, GM and HP are the 3 best examples of this.
I'm glad they have lost billions in their GE Money and GE Commercial Finance units. The moral of the tale is that I advise People in IT to not touch any GE product. What the hell does GE with lierally dozens of business units operating globally know about Software anyway. This is just a mickey mouse business with GE Healthcare which was known as GE Medical Systems. As you know the products will be written by second rate Indian programmers in Pune or Chennai.
Reply to this comment
by frasercrane October 31, 2009 11:53 PM PDT
The Federal government's version of this fiasco is the Social Security Administration's digitizing of medical records which went into effect several years ago and has proven so far to be unmanageable and no more productive than paper documents.
advertisement

The yogurt makers of tech: Gadgets to avoid

Don't buy these one-trick ponies--unless you like gizmos that gather dust.

Google wants to unclog Net's DNS plumbing

The Net giant, ever eager for a faster Internet, debuts its Google Public DNS service. With it, Google could become even more central to the Net.

advertisement

About Health Tech

From advancements in electronic health records to cutting-edge surgical tools, CNET covers the medical-technology news buzzing through operating and waiting rooms.

Add this feed to your online news reader

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right